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A17167 A confutation of the Popes bull which was published more then two yeres agoe against Elizabeth the most gracious Queene of England, Fraunce, and Ireland, and against the noble realme of England together with a defence of the sayd true Christian Queene, and of the whole realme of England. By Henry Bullinger the Elder.; Bullae papisticae ante biennium contra sereniss. Angliae, Franciae & Hyberniae Reginam Elizabetham, & contra inclytum Angliae regnum promulgatae, refutatio. English Bullinger, Heinrich, 1504-1575.; Golding, Arthur, 1536-1606. 1572 (1572) STC 4044; ESTC S106868 129,668 182

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vsurpyng monstruously the place of supreme head And finally which hath presumed to dispose parsons of churches other Catholicke Priestes and to make constitutions in cases Ecclesiasticall deposing and oppressing the Catholike Byshops and aduauncing or restoryng wicked preachers and ministers of vngodlinesse to the roomes of those that be deposed c. This ye may sée is the fayre Helene for the winnyng of whom the Romish Byshops haue made warre in Christendome now these certeine hundred yeares agaynst all Christen Kinges and Princes This is the ground of all their grief verely this is the onely cause for which they haue turmoyled the whole world and cease not to turmoyle it euen at this day that is to wit in so great light of the Gospell which now shyneth bright and triumpheth through the whole world a most assured proofe of inuincible shamelesnesse and wilfulnesse For the Lord without any parable and most manifestly in the Gospell sayth to the pastors of Churches The kings of the Gentiles reigne ouer them but so shall not you Neuerthelesse the Byshop who will séeme to be the Prince of pastors despising or rather trampling that so manifest commaundement of the Lord vnder his féete is not ashamed to take vppon him all power as well in spirituall as temporall matters And what els is that but to wype away all shamefastnesse and openly and wickedly to rebell agaynst God and to outface him with saying to him but we will do so and not simply but also farre further yea and more to But I haue shewed euidently inough afore that all pastors of Churches are called and ordeined by Christ not to beare rule but to serue in all thinges Monstruously therfore doth the seruaunt of seruauntes which is excluded from all Lordship and appointed onely to do seruice vsurpe to him selfe the thyng that is peculiar onely to souereines whom God hath set in authoritie For if the thyng be sayd to be done monstruously which is done either agaynst nature or Gods expresse ordinaunce I pray you what can be deuised more monstruous than that he whom the Lord of all thinges of whom commeth all power and dominion hath cast downe as the basest seruaunt of all and put farre vnderneath the footestooles of all Lordes should not onely take vpon him the chayre of estate which God hath graunted onely to kynges but also moreouer deuise himselfe a throne which he will haue séeme to be exalted aboue the thrones of all kinges and mountyng vp into the same without remembraunce of his own base estate deuilishly vaunt himselfe to the whole world not now as a King or Emperour onely but also as chief Byshop that obteineth both the swordes and all power both in heauen and in earth Here is that dubbleshapped monster here here is séen that deadly and detestable that horrible also and wonderfull monster which is blased in the holy Scriptures by the title of the great whore which fitteth vppon many waters and vppon the scarlet colored beast full of names of blasphemie But for a kyng or a Quéene to be called a head as well in spirituall as temporall matters within their owne Realme it is no monstruousnesse at all bycause the Lord hath so ordeined it in Gods word Princes be called the heades of the people so the thing can not be sayd to be done mōstruously agaynst nature which is done according to Gods will word With Kyngs I ioyne Quéenes also and not without cause least the Pope perchaunce might surmyse that women are excluded from reignyng or that it is a monstruous thyng if a woman should reigne For we know that the thinges which the Apostle speaketh concernyng the obedience of wiues and the silence of women in the congregation of God are not to be wrested vnto reigning For it is certein that the Lords Apostles impeached not the successions in kyngdomes ne disordered not the accustomed maner of inherityng in kyngdomes Also we know that mention is made in the Bible of the noble Quéene of Saba to her great prayse for her much conference with Salomon Neither will I now say any thyng of Delbora that Iudged Israell of other Princely Ladyes Truly Esay not onely sayd And Kynges shal be thy foster-fathers but also added And Quéenes shal be their nurces they shall bow downe themselues before thée c. Esay 49. ¶ How it is no monstruousnesse for the Queene of England and consequently for all ciuill Magistrates to determine in cases Ecclesiasticall or to vndertake and beare the charge of Church matters as to depose euill Byshops and to set vp better in their roomes NOw then it is out of dout that the sayd most vertuous Quéene is supreme head or souerein Lady in that her Realme ordeined of God himselfe and set ouer the puissant Realme of Englād except it be false which the Lords Apostle and chosen vessel Paule hath sayd Let euery soule be subiect to the higher powers For there is no power but of God and the powers that be are ordeined of god Therfore who soeuer resisteth power resisteth Gods ordinaūce And they that resist shall purchase dānation to themselues Seyng now that all men know these thinges to be most true it foloweth there withal not onely that the Quéene of Englād is Quéene by Gods ordinaūce but also that the byshop that resisteth her setteth himselfe naughtely agaynst her prouoketh Gods greuous iudgemēt agaynst himselfe But forasmuch as the Pope thinkes it a monstruousnesse that a king or a Quéene or any ciuil Magistrate in a cōmō weale should determine of Ecclesiasticall cases put down naughtie Priestes or Bishops aduaunce set vp better in their steddes and take vpon him to beare the charge not onely of temporall affaires but also of spirituall or Ecclesiasticall matters Lo I will proue and shew by euident and inuincible argumentes and examples of holy kynges howbeit briefly that the same thinges are parcell of their dewtie and therfore that the Magistrate doth then by Gods law and accordyng to the commaundement of the euerlastyng God and that the Bishop of Rome snatcheth them to him selfe and to his rable tyrannically and wickedly agaynst God playeth the Antichrist in pluckyng them from those to whom God hath giuen them That God in any wise would and that he hath ordeined from the beginnyng that Kynges in their kyngdomes and Magistrates in their common weales ought to take vpon them the care euen of Religion and to looke faithfully vnto it and to order it diligently accordyng to the rule of Gods woord this is the greatest proofe that God in hys law doth straitly commaund a copie of the law to be deliuered to the Prince of his people therby to dispose all his affaires And in the same law he commaundeth the Magistrate to make examination of doctrines and to restrayne yea and to smyte such as withdraw mē from God and such as teach stubbornly agaynst the law These thinges are to
to determine of ecclesiasticall cases deposing and oppressing the catholicke Bishops and aduauncing and putting in their roomes leawd preachers and ministers of vngodlinesse Moreouer sayth the Bull she hath abolished the sacrifice of the Masse prayers fasting choice of meates single life and all catholicke rites and commaunded bookes that conteine open heresie to be set forth to the whole Realme and wicked mysteries and ordinances receiued and obserued by her selfe according to the appointment of Caluine to be also obserued of her subiectes She hath forbidden the Clergie and laitie to acknowledge the Romane Church or to obey the commaundementes therof yea and she hath compelled them to renounce by othe the authoritie and obedience of the Bishop of Rome She hath layd penalties and punishmentes vpon such as shall disobey and hath executed the same vpon such as haue continued in the vnitie of faith and obedience aforesayd and therwithall also she hath cast the catholicke bishops in prison where they haue ended their daies miserably pyned in much and long languishing and dayly sorow All which thinges are so notorious as there is no roome left for any excuse defence or shift to serue in the matter Wherfore rising now out of the throne of his with sword drawen and pronouncing the extremest sentence against the most vertuous Quéene yea and against all her complices through the whole Realme he denounceth and declareth her an hereticke and a fauourer of heretickes and therfore most proudly determineth her to be strickē through with his curse and cut of from the vnitie of Christes body and moreouer to be depriued of her kingdome and of all right of her crowne of all maner of other preheminence dignitie and priuiledge And not content with this he procéedeth yet further and geueth charge to all and singular the Quéenes Nobilitie and other her subiectes that vnder paine of the sayd curse they obey not hereafter the lawes and commaundementes of their pretensed or supposed Quéene as he termeth her Yea and in what sort soeuer they were sworne vnto the Quéene he assoileth them all of such othe and vtterly dischargeth them of all duetie of subiection fealtie and allegeance Upon all which thinges it followeth most manifestly that by setting that most vertuous Quéene and the noble Realme of England and other nations at oddes among thē selues he doth most cruelly and wickedly put her in hazard both of her foes and of her frendes yea and which is horrible to be heard of her owne subiectes to be trayterously torne in péeces through ciuill warres and most outragious seditions if there were any so mad and so voyde of all godlinesse and manhood as to suffer such that is to wit so deuilishe and hellish furie to be so inspired into them by the inchauntmentes of this venemous beast Hitherto I haue declared what thinges are conteined and set forth in that wicked slaunderous seditious and bloudy Bull. Of which thinges if any man be desirous to haue a more compendious abridgment and yet neuerthelesse as fully presumptuous and shamelesse as that which hath béen shewed already let him heare what maner of title the Bull hath set before it to the face of the world The sentence declaratorie of our most holy father Pope Pius the fifth against Elizabeth the pretensed Queene of England and the heretickes that cleaue vnto her Wherby also all her subiectes are declared assoiled of their othe of allegeance and of all other duties whatsoeuer and those that obey her heerafter are wrapped in the same curse ¶ That the foresayd vnmeasurable power of the Romish Bishop is not proued by these wordes of the Lord vnto Peter Peter louest thou me feede my sheepe HItherto you haue patiently heard the Popes sentence or declaration by his Bull against the most vertuous Quéene of England c. and now I pray you be so good as gently to heare me also I will bréefly and plainly shew how there is no truth substance or soundnesse in this Bull and that the cause which the Hope maintaineth and pleadeth against the most noble Quéene is euill and vniust but the case on the Quéenes side very good and rightfull And I will begin at that vnmeasurable power of the Pope which he boasteth of and by force whereof he taketh vpon him to be iudge in this case For that being once ouerthrowen all the whole Bull falleth to the ground together with the iudgement builded vpon this ruinous foundation and so shall the Pope sit in that seate of his not a terrible or iust iudge but an Idoll to be despised yea and to be spit at of all good men and his sentences shall be no more the thunderboltes of Iupiter but counterfait flashes glistering out of a basen in no wise worthy to be regarded Then let that most holy or rather most prophane father tell vs where or by what wordes our Lord deliuered vnto Peter alone and vnto Peters successor the Bishop of Rome that his fulnesse of power that is to say his supreme and most absolute power as well in spirituall as in temporall matters Let him tell vs where or by what wordes the Lord created the Bishop of Rome prince ouer all nations and ouer all kingdomes I am not ignorant of your stincking and vnsauerie fables in this behalfe I am not ignorant what Decretalls haue béene put forth by Gregory the ix Boniface the viij Innocent the 4. Clement the v. Iohn the xxij and such other like to these cōspirators Catilines companions As for me I will not heare those decrées or Decretalls which the famous Lawyer Marsilius of Padwa no lesse aptly than truely sayd to be neither Gods lawes nor mans lawes but proclamations of plaine vniuersall souereintie You say that without any parable at all Christ our Lord gaue the fulnesse of power which ye brag of to Peter and to Peters successor the Pope Bring forth therfore some euident record of this your allegation out of the new Testament Truely ye be not able to bring forth one tittle or one iote of this your allegation And therfore with most wicked lyes and forgeries haue both you and your predecessors now certaine hundred yeares scared and seduced good men that leaned too much vnto you through too light beléef and ouermuch fearfulnesse For where as they haue alledged the wordes which our Lord after his Resurrection did thrise repeate and vrge vpon Peter namely Peter louest thou me feede my sheepe Certes I wonder that both they and you are so past all shame that ye dare bring these thinges for the stablishing of your kingdome or rather your tyranny As who would say we be all of vs blind or blockes voyde of common reason and not able to perceaue how those wordes perteine not to souereintie but to seruice Peter was by this meane to be comforted by the Lord and to be restored to the name and office of Apostle which he séemed to haue lost at the Lordes passion chéefly in this respect because
libertie of the Church as an occasion to plucke the soueraintie to themselues and to oppresse Christian libertie Beleue me I speake of experience they will not cease till they haue gotten all into their owne handes The Pope imagineth new deuises in his brest to the intent he may stablish his owne Empyre he altereth lawes he stablisheth his owne he defileth he filtheth he spoyleth he defraudeth he killeth That lost man whom men are wont to call Antichrist in whose forehead is written a name of blasphemy that is to wit I am God and I cannot erre euen that lost soule I say sitteth in Gods temple and raigneth far and wide These and many other thinges like these did that holy byshop discourse with great boldnesse and constancie Neither was this Prelate altogether a vayne Prophet considering that within thréescore yeares after Boniface the eight of that name a most filthy and vngracious wight is reported to haue bene puffed vp into so diuelish and brasenfaste pride that openly in the Iubilie which he himselfe first inuented and ordayned contrary to the Christian fayth he durst vaunt himselfe as highest byshop and chiefe Emperour before a great assembly and prease of people of all nacions vnder heauen For the first day he came forth in hys byshoplike apparell and gaue the foolishe people his Apostolike blissing as they terme it And the next day wearing an imperiall crowne and being clothed in robes of estate he commaunded a naked sword to be borne before hym and sittyng downe in a throne cryed out Behold here be the two swordes And being not satisfied with this Luciferlike gaze he durst yet further at the same time most spitefully reiect the Ambassadours of the Princes Electors which gaue him to vnderstand that they had chosen Albert Prince of Habspurge and Austrich the sonne of king Rodolphus to be king of Romanes yea and also to make a lawe in all respectes tyrannicall and Antichristian which is extant in the extrauagantes in the booke of maioritie obedience beginning with vnam Sanctam c. In that lawe after he hath attributed all power both spirituall temporall to the Pope in the end he concludeth the same and saith moreouer we declare auouch determine and geue sentence that it is vtterly of necessitie of saluation that all men be subiect to the byshop of Rome Whereas there is commonly blazed abroad of the same byshop this commendation of his that he entred as a Fox raigned as a woolfe others haue as a Lion and dyed as a dogge And whereas Phillip the fayre king of Fraunce appeached him of heresie murther simonie and all maner of most heynous crimes yet are not the Papistes ashamed to alledge still the sayd stinking lawe of this rancke varlet for the maintenaunce of their monarchy Hereunto perteineth it that the Bull of Iohn the xxij published agaynst Lewes the 4. Emperour of that name which Bull Auentine rehearseth whole in his vii booke of Chronicles sayth among other thinges When the chief Empire happeneth to be without a head the souerein power of it is in the handes of the highest Bishop whole benefite the same is c. This durst he write the yeare of our Lord. 323. So greatly were their corages increased since Boniface dyed in prison which was within xxiij yeares space But the Emperour Lewes aunswereth the Bull at large by a proclamation which is to be read copyed whole by the same Auentine into his booke of histories In the same proclamation among other thinges The Byshop sayth he meaning Iohn the xxij thristeth after Christian bloud and soweth euery where the mischief of discord and seditions among Christians Neither can the Christians kéepe the peace giuen them of God by reason of this Antichrist So great is the madnesse of that man or rather of that féend that he preacheth his owne wicked doynges as if they were good déedes in open audience When Christian Princes sayth he are at variance one with an other then is the Romish Priest the hyghest Byshop in déede then reigneth he then is he in his ruffe And so the debate and discord of the Germanes is meate and drinke to the Byshops of Rome Therfore it standes the high prelate in hand to weaken the Empire of the Almaines And a little after the Emperour sayth Looke who soeuer kéepe their allegeance to the Emperour and to Christ our Sauiour which commaundeth them to obey Them for so doyng and for none other cause doth he brond with the marke of heresie What soeuer he listeth he déemeth it lawfull How shall I therfore deale with him He mindeth not to execute or to know any right any equitie any good He séeth nothyng he doth nothyng but what he listeth himselfe He taketh to him the spirit of Sathan and maketh himselfe like the highest He suffereth himselfe to be worshipped which thing a certaine aungell forbade Iohn to do vnto him and his féete to bée kissed after the maner of the most cruel tyrantes Diocletian and Alexander whereas Christ our Lord and kyng washed the féete of his Disciples beyng but fishermen to the intent that his messengers should do the same agayne to those that they were sent to so forth I haue rehearsed these things to the end that the manifest record and iudgement not onely of a famous Byshop but also of a most glorious kyng or Emperour concernyng this latter vnhappy and vngracious Bishops might remaine in record In the same tyme of Lewes the iiij about the yeare of our Lord .1330 that is to say two hundred and forty yeares ago florished the renowmed and sage Lawyer Marsilius of Padua who wrate a singular booke for the Emperour Lewes the 4. agaynst the Byshops of Rome and intitled it the defence of peace In the same booke Dict. 2. Chap. 4. he sheweth by many and those most euident reasons that neither the Byshop of Rome no nor any other Byshop or Priest hath any souereintie ouer any man either clerks or layman and that by the example of Christ if any such be offered them they ought to refuse it and that all Byshops and Churchmen ought to be subiect to the souerein that ruleth them Agayne the same man in Dict. 2. Cap. 25 sayth thus They haue taken to them the title which they make their boast of namely The fulnesse of power which they say that Christ gaue peculiarly vnto them in the person of S. Peter as to the successors of the same Apostle they indeuer to make it the instrument of this naughtinesse By which cursed title by sophisticall spéech they labour to bring all Princes people and persons politike and seuerall in bondage to them And agayne Although the Euangelist sayd trew in auouchyng Christ to be kyng of kynges and Lord of Lordes yet notwithstandyng he that hath auouched any power of souereintie at all much lesse any full power to be graūted to the Bishop of Rome or to any other Bishop in the persō of S.
déede that wise Prince king Henry the viii turned the Church that is in England away from many Romish superstitions that were very fowle And what offended he therin Nay rather he deserued prayse and his fallyng away is counted among wise men a vertue and not a vyce Moreouer the renowme of this Prince is so famous among all good and godly men as it can not be defaced by the raylinges of these rascals of the Romish sink He was of singular learnyng of notable wisedome and experience of excellent corage and adorned with all heroicall vertues and feates méete for a Prince And it is not I alone that thinke thus of this Kyng there be other graue personages which haue commended the same thinges in hym This Prince departyng blessedly out of this lyfe in the xxxviii yeare of his reigne about the end of Ianuary in the yeare of our Lord .1547 and hauyng erst by his will intayled the succession of his Crowne first vnto his sonne Edward a young child of ix yeares of age and successiuely after hym vnto his daughters Marie and Elizabeth was succeded by the sayd Edward the vi of that name whose ample commendations that notable Historiographer Sleidan hath comprised in few wordes in the xxv booke of his Comentaries saying Edward the vi the kyng of England doutlesse a Prince of singular towardnesse departed out of this lyfe the vi day of Iuly in the yeare of our Lord. 1553. beyng about the age of xvi yeares truly to the grief of all godly men For after his decease there folowed a very great alteration of thinges in England Surely Europe hath not had any kyng of so great hope now these certein hundred yeares Beyng very well trayned vp in godlinesse and instructed in learnyng euen from his tender yeares he was séene not onely in the Latin toung but also in the Gréeke the Frēch tounges and he had an earnest loue to the doctrine of the Gospell and gaue interteinement and defence to all learned men Germaines Italiās Frenchmen Scottes Spanyardes and Polonians Thus much saith he furthermore Iohn Bale Byshop of Ossoria in Ireland reporteth that this King did also exercise himselfe in writing and among other thinges wrate a Comedie of the whore of Babylon Concernyng the gouernaunce of Quéene Mary and her bringyng of the Church backe agayne to the Sea of Rome I will say nothing at this present bycause the declaration therof would be very sorowfull and lamentable and to say truth it sticketh yet still more fresher is all mēs myndes thou that it néedeth to be ripped vp agayne This onely will I say further that the Bishops of Rome were euen then also heauie frendes to the Realme of England as they had ben oft afore accordyng as they had alwayes wrought mischief vnto other kingdomes also in Christendome for these fiue hūdred yeares and more But God will iudge them when he séeth tyme. After Quéene Marie succeded Quéene Elizabeth in the kyngdome not a thrall of wickednesse as the Popes rayling mouth doth slaunderously reuile her but the seruaunt yea and the faithful seruaunt of Iesus Christ our redemer and Lord as by him set at libertie from the thraldome of sinne and made his fréewomā so as she is now the daughter of God and an enemie of all wickednesse yea euē of the Popes for their wickednesse sake For she cleaueth entierly to her onely Redemer Christ to him onely doth she with singular faithfulnesse and diligence indeuer to knit the people of her Realme and the subiectes that be vnder her charge Her owne selfe liueth a lyfe beséemyng a Christian princesse commendyng holy and honest conuersation to all folkes through her Realme and as much as in her lyeth forbidding restreining all wickednesse Which thing truly is not to draw backe her subiectes to destructiō but to plucke them from destruction and to restore them to assured saluation They that know this Quéene know also that I feyne nothing here to curry fauour And I touche these things the more sparely least I may séeme to purpose in any wise to flatter Neither hath her maiestie any néede of my defence considering that her owne godlinesse and innocencie defend her Surely her Maiestie like as also her brother of most blessed memorie Kyng Edward the vi did opened a Sanctuarie to outlawes I meane mē that fled their countryes and banished men that is to wit which were driuen out of the Popish common weales not for committyng wicked crymes but for castyng away of Idolatrie and for professing the healthfull Gospell of Iesu Christ. I graunt that these folke are enemyes or angry in their hartes howbeit not against Christ and his most holy Gospell but against the Pope and his most lewde practises cursed superstitions I graūt that the pope termeth these mē heretikes howbeit wrongfully for in very déede they be right Catholikes abhorryng all heresie fightyng agaynst it He that receiueth these receiueth Christ accordyng as Christ himselfe witnesseth who also promiseth most ample reward to such as giue enterteinemēt to his outcastes Therfore let that gracious Quéene reioyce let her reioyce I say in openyng refuge to the miserable outcastes that are driuen out of their countrie for the true Religion for she shall assuredly receiue those most ample rewardes at the Lordes hand And let not her Maiestie passe at all for that abhominable barbarousnesse and crueltie of Rome which both persecuteth the innocentes most outrageously it selfe and also cruelly commaundeth others to persecute oppresse and murther them That these men should so do S. Peter hath foretold in his Epistle where he matcheth them with wyld beastes Let that vertuous Quéene then shunne these cruell and beastly examples and let her rather hearken to Esay the holy Prophet of God speaking in the name of his God and saying Set thy shadow as a night in the midday hyde the chased and bewray not them that be fled Let my banished people dwell with thée Moab be thou their refuge agaynst the destroyer To impeach the right of hospitalitie hath alwayes ben reputed as one of the heynousest crymes that could be euen among the heathen But to giue harbrough to the afflicted and to the Church of Christ it hath alwayes and specially in Christes Church bene reckened among the cheefest vertues and allowed of all good men ¶ That it is no monstruousnesse at all for the Queene of England to be called supreme head of the Realme of England vpon earth ANone after among the haynous offences neuer able to be purged with any sacrifice and which most of all moueth the choler that boyleth inwardly in the brest of the vniuersal bishop and souerein Lord as he him selfe will séeme to be as well in cases spirituall as temporall bycause that power can abyde no partnershyp the foresayd thyng is bitterly recited in the Bull euen in these wordes Which will haue her selfe acknowledged alone for souerein Lady in cases spirituall and tēporall by
may not faile c. For too what purpose this sentence pertayneth the Lord himselfe declareth immediatly by the wordes which he addeth saying And when thou art turned againe strengthen thy bretherne Starke mad and geuen vp into a wilfull wicked mynde must he néedes be that wresteth these sayinges to the maintenance of the Popes most wrongfull power which are most manifestly apparant to be spoken to the admonishment and comforte of such as are falne For that place by warning vs before hand doth simply teach vs the same thing which Peter him selfe hath taught vs afterward saying your aduersarie the deuill walketh about like a roaring Lyon séeking whome he may deuour which thing our Lord expressed by saying He hath craued you to winowe you whome withstande you watching by fayth For the Lord in those his wordes vnto Peter teacheth vs not only that thing but also this namely that our standing out in temptations is not by our own strength but by the defence helpe and benefite of Christe our Lord who doubtlesse geueth increaseth and maintayneth fayth in vs which Iohn in his Epistle calleth the victory that ouercōmeth the world Furthermore it teacheth vs that neither the offences which we haue committed nor the incessant and importunate trauailes of Satan against vs must in any wise make vs dispayre when we be exercised with temptations yea or also falne in our encounters considering how Peter the denier yea and forswearer of Christ obtayned forgeuenesse at Christes handes which was done for an euerlasting assuraunce and witnesse that all sinners although they be beguiled by Sathan shall neuerthelesse be gently receyued into fauour if they returne to the Lorde For this is it that Peter beyng himselfe winowed by Sathan but yet gathered vp againe and set vpon his féete and preserued by the protection of Christ shoulde strengthē his brethrē And what I pray you do these things make for the stablishing of the vnmeasurable and most licentious power of Popes It neuer came in the mynde of Christ nor yet of Peter to thinke any thing therof Full of sacrilege therefore is these most corrupt mens exposition whiche they force vppon vs vtterly against our Lordes wordes But what should it make to the proofe of their souereintie though it were neuer so true which they say that the fayth of the Romain church neuer fayled Yet finde we not that the Lord spake any such thing here I haue prayed for thée Peter sayth he that thy fayth may not fayle And although Peters fayth which he had geuen him which also he preached yea and adde further which he preached at Rome be continuall and such as neuer fayleth as truely through Gods grace it florisheth in places innumerable at this day through the whole world and like as also it was neuer vtterly quenched at any tyme what pertayneth that to the Romish Church in these dayes and to the most arrogant supremacie of the same But it is much more easily spokē then proued that the fayth of the Romane church neuer fayled if by her fayth ye meane that simple and vncorrupted fayth which Peter had and taught For to auoyde multiplieng of wordes goe to let indifferent comparison be made what maner of doctrine and fayth Peters was in old tyme and what maner of doctrine and fayth the Romaine churches is at this day vnder the Romane bishops Go too let comparison also be made betwene the maners whole lyfe of Peter and the maners and lyues of the Romish bishops which will néedes be Peters successors And therupō let iudgement be geuen When the Lord after supper as he was goyng to the garden of mount Oliuet bad his disciples sell euen their garmentes and get them swordes and vpon the answer of his disciples how they had two in redinesse sayd they were enowe he did not then deliuer both the swordes as well spirituall as temporall to be vsed in the Church vnto Peter to whome onely and peculiarly he did not then speake For by and by he addeth the cause of this his commaundement saying I say vnto you yet must this Scripture be fulfilled in mée and he was reckoned among offenders verely meaning thereby that he should vppon mounte Oliuet be bound and led away as a transgressor and that his disciples also should be put in extreme hazarde of their liues from which notwithstanding he would deliuer them not by the terror of any sworde but by his owne only voyce or power The Lord then ment another thing yea and a farre other thing than to yeld the vse of the temporall sword and this endlesse authoritie either to Peter or to any other mā Nay rather whē his disciples were redy armed to fight he ment too set before their eyes euē vpō mount Oliuet that in the persecutions which should come vpon thē for his sake they should not be deliuered by the helpe of temporall swordes but by the ayde and worde of their maister Christ saying if ye séeke me let these go their wayes And to this end did the Lord suffer Peter to draw his sworde and to make assault vpon Malchus the bishops seruaunt But what preuayled Peter by that So little did he with that sworde of his deliuer himselfe or his fellowdisciples and much lesse his maister from the present daungers that he had rather turned the bloudy weapons of his enemies vpon himselfe if his maister had not sayd let these go their wayes Then was it Christes protection and not the sword that saued the disciples and euen at this day also as many as be saued in persecution are saued by the same defence Which thing he ment to shew to the eye by those swordes both to them and to vs warning vs couertly by the way that in persecution we must turne vnto Christ and craue his help who is able euen with a worde to asswage any manner of tempestes be they neuer so outragious And to this purpose serued the swordes at leastwise which were brought at this tyme and to this ende to mount Oliuete at the commaundement of Christ. Besides this the Lord expounding his owne woordes turneth hym vnto Peter and sayth put vp thy sword into the sheathe for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword Thinkest thou not that I can presently pray to my father and he will geue me mo then xij legions of angels But how then shall the scriptures be fulfilled for so must it bée Séeing therfore that the Lord commaundeth Peter earnestly to put vp his sworde into the scaberd who séeth not that the Lordes bidding of his disciples to cary out swords with them was to the end that now by this sight he might openly and effectually and without all couerture restraine the vse of the sword both from Peter and frō all ministers yea and to plucke it out of their handes when they had taken it already Considering then how the Lord pulled that temporall sword out of the handes of
Peter what wicked féend willeth you Bishops to draw the sworde againe out of the scaberd contrary to the Lordes commaundement to shake it and to misuse it at your owne pleasure Doth it not irke you and shame you to say that by these wordes of of the Lordes is sufficiently geuen vnto you the power of both swordes whē as he hath geuē you so little or nothing at all therof hitherto that he hath euen openly striken the temporall sword out of your handes Now let the whole world iudge whether those Romish gripes haue proued by the foresayd textes of Scripture that Christ hath geuen vnto them the very full power of both the swordes Certesse the testimonies which they haue hitherto alledged out of the Scriptures haue not onely not geuen any thing too them but also taken from them all the thinges which they clayme to themselues against all right and reason Here are expounded these wordes of our Sauiour Thou art Peter and vpon this rocke c. and it is shewed that in thē there is nothyng spoken of the Popes fulnesse of power that the church of Christ is not builded vpon Peter or the Pope THat sword of theirs wherof they made their vaunte being striken out of their hand by and by they make hast to the rocke wherupon the Church is founded and consequently vnto Peter and his keyes For in these and by him they auouch themselues to haue receiued power and most full soueraigntie both of heauen earth And there they blaze out wonders of the building of the Church vpon Peter and of the keyes and wonderfull working power of them alledging for themselues the wordes of our sauiour which are written in the xvi chap. of the gospell of S. Mathew But these men with their sacriledge they are neuer able to cleare themselues or make amends therfore do corrupt this most holy place replenished with healthfull doctrine and consolation Which thing by gods helpe I wil euidently shew to the godly readers by the things that ensew The Lord in that place demaundeth of his disciples whom men take him to bée His disciples aunswer how there be diuers iudgementes and opinions of hym among the people some saying him to be Helias some Ieremy c. And by that question it was the Lordes wil to do them to wit how there haue alway bene alwayes shal be diuersitie of opinions in the world concerning religiō how be it that no man ought to be offended at that diuersitie for we read also the Lordes Apostle hath sayd there must néedes be heresies to the ende that such as be tryed among you may be made manifest And vnto the former questiō the Lord addeth forthwith an other namely what the disciples who had heard Christ now a long while and therefore doutlesse were better séene in matters of Religion thē the common sort were I say what opiniō they themselues had of christ And by this other question of his he shewed that the sure and true confession in matters of Religion is to be asked at the hand of the children of God for they must not wauer as the children of this world do and be sure of nothing nor apply themselues to euery kinde of opinion after the liking and course of this world Truly in many other places of the scripture also is required a singular and true confession of fayth at the handes of euery one of gods children To this question Saint Peter not so much in his owne name as in the name of all the other disciples vttereth a singular confession saying Thou art Christ the sonne of the liuing God very God I say and very mā euen that same anoynted namely the Messias or Christ that was to come into the world The king I say and priest the mediator pacifier redéemer and saluation of the whole worlde And that this confession is the true and sincere confession Paule also the apostle of Christ sheweth in the third fourth and tenth chapters to the Romaines and in many other places The Lord liking well of this confession sayth vnto Peter Blessed art thou Simon the sonne of Ionas geuing to vnderstand in these short wordes what and how great the force of true fayth in Christ is namely euen to iustify and make blessed that is to say to make pertakers of eternall life which thing the apostle sheweth in large wordes in his Epistles to the Romaines Galathians Ephesians in other places Furthermore the Lord immediatly addeth frō whence commeth that same so excellent fayth saying flesh bloud hath not opened it vnto thée but my father which is in heauen Fayth then hath not his originall in vs or of vs but is geuen vs from heauen by the father of lyght according as the Apostle witnesseth in many places and the Lord himselfe saith in Iohn No man commeth vnto me except my father draw him Moreouer this fayth grafteth vs in Christ and maketh vs Christians for there followeth in the Lordes wordes And thou art Peter namely for confessing of the rocke Petra now what a rocke is there is no man but he knoweth And in the scriptures it is euery where Metaphorically applyed vnto God because he is the strength the stedinesse the refuge and the foundation of the faythfull wheruppon they rest and in whom only they be preserued Of this Petra rocke was Simon the sonne of Ionas called Peter which name implyeth as much as if a man shoulde say grounded vpon the rocke God and grafted into Christ the sonne of God stedfast and so consequently a Christian for the doctors interpreters of holy scripture do terme Christians Peters also because that beyng setled by fayth vpon the rocke Christ they draw stedinesse strength and lyfe out of him so as through the operacion of Christ they be all their lyfe lōg stedfast in fayth honor Christ with all kind of vertues And Peter himselfe also expounding this mysterie vnto vs sayeth Christ the rocke is the lyuing stone forsaken in deede of men but chosen and precious vnto God vpon whom we also as liuely stones are builded that we may be a spirituall house offeryng spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God through Iesus Christ. Whosoeuer are not such Peters or stones there is no cause that they should glory at all of the name of Peter or Christians for they continue that which they bée euen the children of this world There followeth yet further in the Lordes wordes And vpon this Rocke will I build my Church By which woordes Christ ascending from the particular to the generall and deliuering an vniuersall lesson to his Church declareth most manifestly that these thinges belong not to Peter alone or to his disciples onely but to the Catholike that is to the vniuersal church wherof the foundacion Rocke and head is Christ vpon whom being builded by faith she shal obtayne saluation As if the Lord had sayd not onely Peter is so called of me the Rocke but also as